ANZ bank said on Thursday that Brent was “now threatening to break through $80 per barrel … (as) geopolitical risks continue to support prices, (and) an unexpected fall in inventories in the U.S. got investors excited yesterday.”

U.S. crude inventories dropped by 1.4 million barrels in the week to May 11, to 432.34 million barrels.

ANZ said the falling U.S. inventories were “raising concerns of tight markets heading into the U.S. driving season,” during which demand typically rises.

Looking beyond seasonal changes, U.S. bank Morgan Stanley said it had raised its Brent price forecast to $90 per barrel by 2020, due to a steady increase in demand.

Everything bullish?

Not all pointed to a tighter market, however.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) said on Wednesday that it had lowered its global oil demand growth forecast for 2018 from 1.5 million barrels per day (bpd) to 1.4 million bpd.

The IEA said global oil demand would average 99.2 million bpd in 2018.

And although supplies currently only stand at 98 million bpd due to supply cuts led by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), the IEA said that “strong non-OPEC growth … will grow by 1.87 million bpd in 2018.”

Leading production increases is the United States, where crude output has soared by 27 percent in the last two years, to a record 10.72 million bpd.

That puts the United States within reach of top producer Russia, which pumpsaround 11 million bpd.

As a result of its surging production, U.S. crude is increasingly appearing on global markets as exports.

Commodity brokerage Marex Spectron said that the surge in U.S. supplies was a “strongly price-bearish development.”

It said the economic outlook was also “firmly bearish” as “short-term credit conditions have worsened which … hasn’t been priced correctly by the market”.

The brokerage also said that U.S. energy intensity “continues to decrease which is never good news for the future consumption of oil”.